Chandrababu Naidu (CBN)
had sought through this election a referendum for his fascist policies of
crushing the naxalites, particularly the CPI(ML)(PW). He had made it the main
election issue after the abortive attack by the PW on him at Tirupathi. But, the
election turned into a referendum on CBN’s 9-yearWorld Bank-dictated despotic
rule. This blue-eyed boy of big business, Bill Gates, Clintons, and their clan
was kicked out by mass discontent against his horrifying rule. In these nine
years not only have hundreds of revolutionaries and democrats been murdered by
his henchmen in cold blood, but thousands and thousands more have been pushed to
their death due to hunger starvation and curable disease.
In this Assembly
election the TDP/BJP combine’s vote percentage dropped by a huge 8% compared to
1999. 31 of the 38 TDP cabinet ministers were defeated. The number of TDP seats
in the Assembly fell from 180 to a mere 47now; while that of the BJP fell from
12 to 2. The Congress virtually doubled its tally to 185. This, together with
the TRS’s (pro-Telegana party) 26 and the ‘Left’s’ 15 (in 1999 it was 2), gave
it a two-thirds majority. The same trend was reflected in the Lok Sabha where
the Congress won 29, the TRS 5, the ‘Left’ 2, and the TDP got a mere 5 seats
(and the BJP zero). Even the much hyped female voter rejected the TDP where only
41% voted for it while 54% voted for the Congress.
But, if one gets
deeper into the voting percentages things do not look that bright and it can be
seen that the Congress landslide was basically due to its alliances with the TRS
and the ‘Left’. In fact the Congress vote actually went down 2.4% compared to
1999, and the overall vote of the Congress was only 1% more than that of the TDP
— the Congress got 38% of the vote to the TDP’s 37%.
So, in fact, what was
seen in this election was a vote basically in rejection of the TDP’s policies,
it was neither for the Congress nor the TRS (who won only about 50% of the seats
contested). It was a clear-cut rejection of the World Bank sponsored economic
policies and the policies of brutal repression. The TDP has borrowed a gigantic
Rs.57,000 crores, most of it from the World Bank and other imperialist agencies,
another Rs.3,500 crores from the Centre and has been granted 55 lakh tones of
foodgrains for famine relief — yet poverty has been increasing at a rate
probably more than that of any other State. Per capita growth rate is below that
of the 1980s. The purchasing power of the average citizen has gone down,
employment growth rates were low, health parameters worsened (even though Naidu
called Hyderabad the "Health Capital of India") and successive droughts and
unremunerative prices have devasted agriculture. Over 3,000 rural people have
officially committed suicide (the actual figure will be far larger). The
situation would be so desperate that in the 10 days after the election results
were declared another 60 people committed suicide. In addition lakhs have been
thrown into unemployment due to the imperialist dictated policies and these huge
funds borrowed have generated barely any new employment. Last year it was the
only State in the country where hundreds of gruel centres distributed lakhs of
free meals to a devastated population. Not a single one of these centres was
supported or run by the State government. On the contrary it declared on record
in the Assembly the absence of hunger in the State.
Where then have all
the funds gone? Basically as subsidies to big business and TNCs, to TDP cronies
and for counter-insurgency purposes, and of course for CBN’s media campaigns!!!
It is reported that CBN has himself amassed funds to the tune of about Rs.3,000
crores (See Box). Quite naturally the anger against the TDP was vehement amongst
large sections of the population, and though large numbers of the vote could
have been maneuvered by a pliable administration (to get him the 37% count), his
didactic, arrogant and authoritarian approach created enemies even within the
administrative structures. All this resulted in his rout.
But now, before
coming to what the situation is likely to be under the Congress dispensation,
let us see what exactly happened in AP during the elections.
Specifities of the
elections in AP:
Elections in the
state of Andhra Pradesh assume special significance due to several specific
features.
Firstly, it was one
of the three states where elections to both the state Assembly and the Lok Sabha
were held simultaneously.
Secondly, elections
to the state Assembly were held after a five-and-a-half month interregnum
between the dissolution of the Assembly and the final polls. Never before had
the state witnessed such a long period of campaigning for the elections with
only a caretaker government in power. The amount of money spent during the
massive campaign is beyond anyone’s imagination.
Thirdly, the
elections were held with the most amusing and peculiar of reasons-that of
Naxalism having becoming a hurdle to the development of the state. It is the
first time that such an issue had become the principal agenda in the election
anywhere in the country let alone AP.
Fourthly, they were
held when the issue of a separate state of Telengana had come to the fore as a
line of demarcation among the contesting political parties. Never before had the
electorate been divided so sharply on the question of a separate state. While
the TRS openly advocated for a separate state and the Congress pretended to take
a sympathetic stand, the TDP was vehemently against separation and had
campaigned on the plank of fighting the separatist forces and for a united
Andhra Pradesh. The BJP, while allying with the TDP, was ambiguous, at times
speaking in favour and at times opposing the demand. It maintained that peace
should first prevail before considering the issue of a separate state.
Fifthly, it was an
election in which an incumbent Party was desperately trying to come back for the
third time by showing its progress card, showering false promises, attacking the
opposition parties in a manner never before heard of in the state’s politics,
and using the Naxalite attack on the Chief Minister to gain personal sympathy.
The photographs of the blood-stained Chief Minister after the attack in Alipiri
were distributed in lakhs all over the state in a bid to gain sympathy.
In a way, the
election scene in AP can be likened to a dog-fight in the streets. The biggest
of the dogs, with a fleshy bone of meat between its teeth, was reluctant to give
it up or share it with the other dogs. While those that had been denied the meat
for nine long years, were itching to pull it out of the incumbent’s mouth. Hence
the dog-fight got sharper, barking shriller by the day, pulling each other’s
tail, biting each other all for a bone of meat. For it is no ordinary bone of
meat. It is the wealth of a state that is one of the richest in the country, a
state that attracts thousands of crores of rupees from across the seas. No
matter if it has a huge loan of 57,000 crores at present. The imperialist lapdog
had already promised that he would bring another one lakh crores to the state
from the masters abroad if voted back to power. A mind-boggling figure that can
feed several dogs while doling out part of it to the hapless people in whose
name the money flows into the state.
Hence the big fight.
Every Party was itching for power in order to gobble up as much of the state’s
wealth as it could in the next five years. And there were too many aspirants for
the seats in every Party while the seats too few! This gives rise to dog-fight
within each Party. The barking and biting within each political party had never
been so acute, so open, so vulgar, and so noisy. Party offices of each and every
Party were burnt by the members of the same Party. Killings, stabbings, free
play of force and the most indecent abuse against their own respective Party
leaders, allegations of malpractices such as taking money for allotting seats,
favouritism and caste-communal prejudices in the allotment of seats, etc., etc.,
rent the air in every Party office and openly. While those who got the seats
exploded crackers and set off fireworks in joy, those who didn’t exploded bombs
on the opponents and set fire to Party offices in fury. The drama reached its
crescendo on the day of filing the nominations. Several hundreds turned
rebellious overnight and filed their nominations brushing aside the warnings
from the top brass.
After the date of
withdrawal of the nominations the axe had free play. The leaders of every
political Party had to crush the rebellion within as it was spreading like
cancer. "TDP wields the axe to crush the rebels-expels 14 members for life."
ran a newspaper headline. "16 Rebel candidates expelled from Congress"
was the headline one day. "12 TRS rebels contest the election", "BJP’s
feel-good only for the lucky, expelled candidates feel bad"…there is no end
to the news of bickerings, the dog-fights and expulsions in each Party. Everyone
wants a share of the large cake that state power offers. Whatever the colour of
the Party, whatever its manifesto, whatever the promises, the aim is the same —
to get a bite at the bone of meat.
"It is unpatriotic
and anti-national to boycott the polls" screamed the pet-dogs of the
imperialists and the ruling classes. "Vote for anyone you like. If you don’t
like this Party vote for others but by not casting the vote you would only be
playing into the hands of anti-socials and weakening our democracy"
sermonised the high priests of democracy like DGP Sukumar on one day. In
present-day Andhra Pradesh under Chandrababu’s TDP, khaki and yellow had become
indistinguishable from each other. The police do what the politicians are
supposed to be doing-right from distributing funds in the villages, implementing
the so-called development works such as construction of roads, schools, digging
wells, holding medical camps and so on to election campaigning.
One might wonder how
and why these men in khaki were doing all these things, which a politician is
supposed to do. The question of HOW is irrelevant in the police state of AP.
None would dare ask the question. Chandrababu Naidu had given them all-pervasive
power to arrest, torture, kill, raise armed vigilante gangs, organize covert
agents and informants, attack civil liberties activists and others who dare to
speak against the State, to make huge illegal earnings through coercion in the
name of containing the Naxalite threat and numerous underhand deals in real
estate and other businesses. The police thus had a strong vested interest in
seeing the TDP come back to power.
Not that the Congress
or any other Party would act differently and curtail the powers of the police in
the long run. The problem lies in the promises made by the opposition parties
that they would institute a judicial enquiry into the fake encounters that took
place in the nine-year rule of the TDP, that they would create a conducive
atmosphere and initiate Talks with the Naxalites-a prospect dreaded by the
police for the simple reason that it would cut into their power and profits
through extortion from people in Naxal areas, and such others. Though all this
is an eye-wash and is aimed at garnering more votes in the Telangana areas,
nevertheless, it would be difficult for the opposition parties to outrightly go
back on these promises on the very morrow of coming to power as the people would
not take it lying down after so much expectation had been raised. It is only
matter of time before the new government too would embark upon the same set of
policies as its predecessor. But the police state bosses in AP are not prepared
to let down the brutal offensive against the Naxalites, and the masses at large,
a wee bit, even if that be temporary. Such was the rationale behind their
campaign for the TDP in all possible ways, both overt and covert.
An Election at
Gun-Point
Never before had an
election in the state witnessed such a degree of state terror on the people and
held amidst threats and intimidation. The curtain for this gory drama was up
from the very day Naidu’s TDP decided to dissolve the state Assembly on November
15, 2003 and go for elections ten months ahead of schedule. The very act was
based on the prospect of utilizing the State machinery to create an orgy of
violence and bloodshed in the name of containing the Naxal threat for the "smooth
conduct" of election.
The state cabinet
declared its intentions clear when it passed the resolution against the
Naxalites on the very day of the Assembly dissolution. It declared that
Naxalites are a threat to peace and progress and impeded all the development
plans of the government; hence there was only one option before the government
and that is to suppress the Naxalites. It made Naxalism as the principal agenda
for the election citing it as the main reason in going for early election. Thus
the basis for the massive terror campaign by the State was laid and the abortive
attack on the life of the Chief Minister by the naxalites on October 1 came in
handy for this well-laid-out conspiracy.
Within two weeks some
14 comrades belonging to the CPI(ML)[People’s War] were killed in cold blood all
over the state. Thousands of police and central forces such as the CRPF, BSF and
RAF were deployed in the Naxal areas. Arrests and killings increased all over
Telangana, Nallamala forest region and the tribal tracts of Vishakhapatnam,
Vizianagaram and Srikakulam. Aerial surveys were taken up in all the interior
rural areas where the armed struggle was strong. In the forest region of
Vishakhapatnam-Vizianagaram districts alone, three helicopters were used for a
fortnight prior to the election and the mercenary Grey Hounds forces were
airdropped in the area from their recently-set up Headquarters in Vishakhapatnam
city. The repressive forces carried out their terror campaign under several
names—striking force, special striking force, mobile and special mobile parties,
CATs, special watching parties, mobile check-posts, and so on. Hamlets were
evacuated to make room for the brutal offensive of the state. In Nallamala area,
several chenchu hamlets were vacated. The entire fishermen families residing
along the banks of river Krishna were evicted on suspicion that they were
helping the Naxalites. In the AOB region, particularly in the interior region in
Vishakhapatnam district, massive forces of the elite anti-Naxal Greyhounds were
airdropped to unleash a blood bath. In Vizianagaram district, five people were
killed in February-March. On March 8th, three comrades—Vijaya, Sashi and Kumari-were
picked up and shot near Kodika village in Salur mandal. Earlier, on February 28,
Mandangi Rendayya of Chinadodiga village was taken to a cashew plantation, and
shot dead. Another militant, Neelakantha, was also murdered by the police. All
these were done at the behest of the TDP-BJP reactionaries who goaded on the
police to clear up the armed squads of the PGA.
In the month
preceding the election, the police violence knew no limits. Atrocities were
perpetrated virtually on every section in the name of ensuring smooth conduct of
the election. 63,000 people were arrested and released on condition that they
report to the police station every day until the polling was over. In the week
preceding the first phase of polling it grew worse. On April 11, two comrades—Ankeswar
Ramesh alias Vinod and Kothapalli Sambayya alias Uppalayya were picked up and
shot near Kondaparthi village. On April 16, two Naxals were killed near
Yachavaram in Veagapadu loya in Ardhaveedu mandal in Prakasham district. On
18th, the commander of Kalwakurthy Local Guerilla Squad, Narasimha Reddy alias
Prasad was killed by the Grey Hounds mercenaries. They also shot dead a peasant
woman who was washing clothes outside her house. While the politicians dare not
enter these areas for almost four months and in some areas, even to this day, it
has been the police who had taken up the election campaign on behalf of the
political parties, especially the ruling TDP. Counteraction Teams (CATs) have
been set up in hundreds all over the Naxal-dominated areas by the police. In
Nizamabad alone, where the Naxal influence is relatively less today, it is
reported that around 20 teams were set up. In other districts like Karimnagar
and Warangal these run to several scores. The chief task of these CATs is to
unleash terror on a continuous basis on the acivists and sympathisers of PW.
Chandrababu’s Assets: A Lie worth a Thousand Times!
Poor Chandrababu! Nine years in power in one of the richest
states in the country and an equally long association with the world’s richest
man—Bill Gates—had only made him poorer!! With total declared assets of just
over Rs.1.5 crores in his name, Naidu is trailing behind a political novice
like the Home Minister Devendar Goud or several candidates of his party
standing for the assembly and Lok Sabha seats.
What Naidu had decalred may be literally true with just as
much assets in his own name as filed in the affidavit. But his lie is actually
worth a thousand times more. Even if one takes the decalred assets of all the
family members which is around Rs.21 crores, the lie should be worth at least
hundred times more. In our country even an ordinary shopkeeper knows how to
hide his wealth from the prying eyes of the income-tax officials. And
Chandrababu has a hundred times more shrewdness (or cunningness to be more
precise), than an ordinary shopkee-per. He has at his disposal the services of
the best agencies (at home and abroad) that can manipulate finances
limitlessly and, of course, the entire administrative machinery in the state
at his disposal. No wonder, he could effortlessly manage to tuck away over two
thousand crores of rupees (some estimates place this upto even three thousand
crores) in umpteen number of places which, perhaps, only the most
knowledgeable could conceive of.
Naidu is no ordinary politician—not the brainless,
pot-bellied, whimsical, semi-literate, and occasiaonally plain-speaking image
that one is used to. He is among the most capable, ruthless, manipulative,
loyal satrap the imperialists could lay their hands on in the Third World
countries—tactful like a Machiavelli, brutal like a Pinochet or a Marcos,
suave-looking and outwardly refined like a Bush or a Blair (while being as
savage as these butchers)—and the most loyal and committed servant of the
imperialists, the Comprador Big Bourgeoisie and the big landowners. In one
word, he presents the picture of a refined fascist who can cultivate his image
in the media through hook or by crook.
The greatest paradox is: he knows that his lie has no
takers in the state. Ask a beggar, a hawker, a rikshaw wallah or any common
citizen on the street, a blue or white-collared worker, a farmer or even a
trader or an industrialist. Why, ask any of the TDP leaders and you would be
greeted with a mischievous smile. The story of Chandrababu’s declared assets
has become the biggest joke among the 8 crore people in the state. There are
quite a few who admire the talents and the audacity of Naidu in concealing his
huge wealth and declaring a tiny fraction. If Naidu pens a book on "How to
conceal wealth and go scotfree?" it would sell like hot-cakes and might
create a record of sorts. For, imperialism and the consumerist culture has
spawned a new generation of elite who look upon a Harshad Mehta or a
Chandrababu Naidu as their models for getting rich quickly even as the vast
majority are pushed into the abyss of poverty and misery.
Now the moot question is: how can outright liars be brought
to book? A difficult question to answer. When a Bush or a Blair — the
international thugs and the greatest liars of the century — can get away with
their mountain-heap of lies about "liberating" Iraq, getting rid of "tyrant
Saddam", imaginary WMD and about their brazen aggression and occupation of the
country, can smaller players like a CBN or a Narendra Modi be brought to book
for lesser crimes?
The answer lies in the state system which itself is steeped
in the cess-pool of lies and corrupt practices — NOT in the Parliamentary
pig-sty that has all birds of the same feather, none of whose hands are clean,
but in the conscious movement of the masses. It is the people of America and
Britain on the one hand, and the heroic resistance of the national liberation
fighters of Iraq on the other that will seal the fate of butchers and liars
like Bush and Blair. And likewise, it is the unfolding movement of the
peasantry, the working class, women, dalits, adivasis, and other sections of
oppressed masses against the autocratic rule of tyrants like CBN, Modi, Advani
and their policies of sell-out to the imperialists, whipping up communal
massacres etc., that will sound the death-knell of these monsters who trample
the rights of the people.
The police arrived at
this tactic following the failure of their chief, Naidu, in March this year, to
get through his plan to arm the TDP gangs in the name of arming the people to
counter the Naxal attacks. When the proposal brought forth wide condemnation by
all parties which saw this as a ploy to rig the election through the armed gangs
set up by the ruling party, shrewd and cunning Naidu hit upon the idea of
counteraction teams that prowl the streets of the villages and small towns and
aid the ruling party’s bid for power.
The gun thus hung
over the heads of the vast majority of the rural masses. Those who contemplated
boycott had to prepare themselves to be shot. The gun ensures that people do not
stay at home during election time. It drove them to the polling booths. The gun
presided over the "democratic process" of electing the bandits even if one hated
to. The gun was the only guarantee for democracy to blossom and bear fruit. It
was the gun and not the people that decided the election outcome. And it was
only with the gun that the ruling parties could feel good.
Around 90,000 police
personnel were deployed for the "smooth conduct" of the elections in the first
phase on April 20 and around 50,000 in the second phase on 26th. They have
fanned out into the countryside beating up people and threatening them with
fatal consequences if they did not exercise their vote. The ex-militants of the
People’s War party were picked up in hundreds from the villages and were asked
to be in the forefront on the polling day. They were to accompany the police
personnel during their combing operations and movements in Naxal territory, and
later, the polling officials and the police when transporting the ballot boxes.
The ordinary villagers and ex-activists in the revolutionary movement are made
to bear the brunt by forcing them to accompany the police wherever they move.
This was to ensure that the Naxals do not trigger off landmines or claymour
mines. In Guntur, the police could escape from a landmine blast on April 10th by
travelling with over a score of civilians in a road transport corporation bus as
the Naxals only wanted to scare them off by triggering the blast a few seconds
before the bus reached the spot. Later two policemen, including a CRPF
constable, were killed in the exchange of fire with the Naxalites. On April 11,
armed gangs of police in mufti attacked the houses of the APCLC leaders, Mr.
Raja Rao in Guntur town and Chilaka Chandrasekhar in Sathenapalli with soap
bombs.
The campaign in the
Naxal areas of North Telangana, North Andhra and the Nallamala-Rayalaseema
regions was on a low key. While big meetings were organized by the various
parties in towns that are addressed by the top leaders, the candidates,
particularly those from TDP and BJP, hardly stepped into the interior villages.
And even when they did, they were accompanied by a huge contingent of policemen
and only after meticulous checking of the routes for possible landmines. Some of
the candidates and leaders, fearing an attack despite all precautions taken,
prefer to travel in road transport corporation buses along with their gunmen.
They were certain that the Naxalites would not blow off buses when civilians
were inside. However, despite all the precautions and elaborate security
arrangements, the TDP spokesman and the Lok Sabha candidate, Errannaidu, was
attacked by the guerillas of the PGA in Vishakhapatnam. Though he had survived
the attack, he was hospitalised and is till bed-ridden.
An Election marked by intense
dog-fights
The abuse and
violence within and between the various political parties in AP had never been
as intense as in the present elections. The so-called violence (which is only
counter-violence and a legitimate response to the state violence) of the
Naxalites pales into insignificance when compared to that unleashed by the
ruling class parties in their lust for power.
As April 20, the day
of the first phase of polling for half the Assembly constituencies in the state,
drew closer, there was tension in virtually every constituency as each side
feared that the other would indulge in rigging and other malpractices to come to
power. Both sides were prepared fully and were armed to the teeth to outwit the
opponent. Gulam Nabi Azad, a secretary of the AICC, had warned two days before
the date of polling that there would be blood-bath if the ruling TDP tried to
rig the election by using force and manipulating with the ballot boxes. And the
situation was summed up by the state secretary of the Congress on the day after
the last phase of election when he described that it was not an election but a
war between the TDP and the Congress.
The violent clashes
between the TDP-BJP on the one hand and the Congress-TRS on the other have
occurred in almost all the constituencies. For instance, in Pandithapuram
village in Khammam district the clashes led to the opening of fire by the gunmen
of the Congress candidate on the henchmen of the TDP candidate seriously
injuring one. In Narsarao Pet in Guntur district, clashes between the supporters
of the two parties on April 18 left several injured. Being the constituency of
Kodela Shivaprasad Rao, a minister in the state cabinet, infamous for spreading
bomb culture and for maintaining a stock of bombs in his own house, Narsarao Pet
continued to be the hotbed of such clashes not only on the election day but for
several days after the poll.
The second phase of
polling was marked by the greatest violence unleashed by the TDP and the
Congress that made the much-publicised Naxal violence a negligible thing. The
police were deliberately not deployed in places where the TDP had planned to
carry out rigging on a massive scale using guns and bombs against its
adversaries. The media reported that most of the police force was deployed in
the areas under the influence of the Naxalites only to leave the field free for
the TDP goondas.
In Nagasamudram
village in Anantapur, the henchmen of the TDP candidate and the district don,
Paritala Ravindra, kidnapped a Congress polling agent on April 26 from a polling
booth and the don himself shot at him. The police took no steps to arrest the
candidate despite massive protests by various opposition parties and
organisations. Ironically, it was the same gang leader who had distributed
propaganda booklets of the TDP issued in his name calling upon people to decide
whether they wanted development or anarchism! A reporter was also attacked by
the same hoodlums.
On April 26, there
were 124 incidents of violence in the districts of Guntur, Prakasham, Cuddapah,
Anantapur, Kurnool, and the two Godavari districts. Of these, less than a fifth
was on account of the Naxalites while the rest was the violence unleashed by the
ruling class parties. A congress activist, Gilani, died in clashes with the TDP
on 26th in Kandukur in Prakasham district. The town observed a bandh.
On 27th, the Congress
goons attacked the Municipal Chairman of Kakinada who had recently joined the
TDP. His hospital was damaged and several shops were destroyed. The TDP burnt
down the cinema theatre of the Congress candidate and both sides fought pitched
battles with soda bottles, bombs and other weapons. Several vehicles and shops
were destroyed. In Amaravati in Guntur district, the violent clashes flared up
on 27th destroying property worth crores of rupees. In Pipparla village in
Guntur, bombs rained for an hour. In Shankarapuram in Prakasham district, 13
people were injured in clashes and several vehicles were damaged. In Podaralla
in Bukkaraya mandal in Anantapur district, the TDP goons attacked the entire
village for supporting the Congress party killing a Congress supporter and
injuring a woman and child. The violence unleashed by the TDP and Congress thus
ruined the lives of innocent people destroying homes, shops, vehicles and other
property.
Within each party
itself the violent dog-fights have made a mockery of them as political entities.
No politics are involved in any manner whatsoever. It is only the insatiable
greed for power that brings revolts within these parties. Getting the ticket for
a seat means securing ticket to access unlimited wealth and none would think of
losing the opportunity. The total rebel candidates of all parties stood at 81
contesting in 70 constituencies. Of these, 27 were from the TDP, 34 from the
Congress, 18 from TRS and one each from BJP and CPI.
An Explosive situation that spelt
doom for the Yellow Bandits
Right from the time
the alliance between the Congress-TRS and the revisionist CPI and CPI(M) came
into existence in the month of March, pointed to a clear verdict against the
ruling TDP. After the first phase of polls, it was the NDTV and Indian Express
that came up with the prediction that the wave was against the TDP which would
be washed away. By the end of the second phase, almost all the channels except
SaharaTV, talked of a clear majority for the Opposition alliance. This had so
infuriated Naidu and the yellow bandits that they came out attacking the NDTV
and all Exit polls. Earlier Naidu was too pleased about the surveys when they
showed his party had an edge over the Congress. But the moment his
media-management gimmick had failed, he began talking of a ban on the Exit
polls, that they had caused a loss of over 35,000 crores due to plunging of
share values, that the channels were biased towards the Congress, and so on. The
fact was that TDP-BJP had tried desperately to influence the news-channels,
placed lots of Ads and incentives, but they could not make them write in their
favour, so irrefutable was the anti-incumbency trend in the villages and bastis
of AP. Even the pro-BJP Zee news gave only 137-143 to the TDP-BJP alliance even
by mid-March. It was only one survey –that of a dubious organisation calling
itself the Centre for Political Research and Analysis-which gave a clean sweep
for the TDP predicting 208 seats in mid-April survey and scaling it down to 184
on April 28. It was clear that the TDP and the imperialists funded it.
The situation in AP,
particularly the dissatisfaction and discontent of the various sections of the
oppressed masses, is like a powder-keg that might explode any moment. The
economy is in shambles with the debt running to a huge Rs. 57,000 crores for
2003-04 which is expected to rise to Rs. 63,000 crores by 2004-05. When TDP came
to power in 1995, it was Rs. 15,164 crores. The percentage of debt in the
state’s GDP was 18.99 in 195-96 and increased to 32.19 in the current year. The
fiscal deficiet had increased from Rs. 2445 crores to 7338 crores over the same
period.
The burden on the
people at large during the nine year rule of TDP is unbearable. The total
taxation on the people in the form of taxes and user charges had crossed one
lakh crores of rupees. Property tax and water cess was hiked by 300%, State
transport charges had increased by 100%, driving license charges by five times.
Every year, an additional burden of Rs 830 crores was imposed due to rise in
power tariff. With the directives from the World Bank to scrap all subsidies by
2007, the additional burden on power would increase to Rs. 3000 crores.
Education, health,
transport, water and other utilities have become dearer due to drastic cuts in
subsidies. For the first time, user charges were introduced in government
hospitals under the benevolent Naidu. Intermediate education was further
privatised giving the capitalists a huge profit of Rs. 1800 crores in return.
There are a total of
212 private engineering colleges in AP 160 of which do not have the standards
specified by the council for technical education. Medical field is no less worse
and the junior doctors strike had revealed the rot in the field of medical
education. Fake hospitals and fake doctors were created on paper in order to
give permission to new medical colleges.
The Tapan Majumdar
Committee had stated that AP is one of the five states in the country where 51%
of children have not seen a school. This, despite all the euphoria built up by
the TDP over schemes such as total literacy, Chaduvula Panduga, mid-day meals,
and so on.
Drinking water has
become a scarce commodity in the vast rural areas of AP. 33,000 villages do not
have access to safe drinking water. The problem is extremely acute in Telangana
and Rayalaseema. 400 crores of rupees worth business is done annually in the
sale of drinking water.
Agriculture was the
most neglected sector and Naidu became infamous for his remarks that agriculture
was useless and there was no need to spend money on that sector. Even the
farmers in the coastal districts, that had been the traditional granary of the
state, had become bankrupt. Lack of irrigation, cyclones, crop disease, steep
increase in the costs of agricultural inputs, lack of remunerative prices for
the agricultural produce, have become the bane of the peasants in the coastal
districts too. Not a single irrigation project was constructed during the nine
year rule of the TDP. The cost of Polavaram project which can provide irrigation
for 7.2 lakh acres in East and West Godavari, Krishna, and Vishakhapatnam
districts, and can produce 725 MW of power, has been lying in cold storage for
over half-a-century. Its cost has gone up from a mere Rs. 70 crores when
conceived to over Rs. 4000 crores at present.Veligodu project, which can
irrigate land in Nellore, Prakasham and Cuddapah, has been kept aside.
The cash crop growers
of mirchi, turmeric, cotton and tobacco are facing the worst crisis. The mirchi
rate which was around Rs. 4000 a quintal in January this year, had dropped to
less than Rs. 2000 and even Rs. 1200 in the name of low quality. The
trader-bureaucrat nexus is seen as the main culprit by the peasants who have
come forth into militant agitations burning down government offices,
market-yards and traders.
Such is the plight of
the various sections of the people groaning under TDP’s anti-people rule. On the
other hand, the TDP government had given away thousands of crores of rupees
worth property to the imperialists and CBB in the name of development of IT,
amusement parks, Formula 1 for car races, and so on all of which have nothing to
do with the lives of the vast majority of the people.
The truck with the
communal BJP had infuriated the Muslims and other secular forces.
Overall, the
situation had clearly turned against the TDP.
Congress & the Future
It is the intensified
contradictions within the ruling classes that give some space to the people’s
organisations to grow and gain strength or even re-couperate lost ground, not
the ‘progressive’ credentials of one or the other parliamentary party. And as
the crisis in the economy grows such contradictions are bound to intensify and
the proletarian forces could use is to the maximum to gain strength and equip
themselves to hit stronger blows on the enemy forces.
Soon after coming to
power the Congress CM immediately made statements on the two main issues of the
elections — free electricity and its attitude towards the PW. He immediately
announced free electricity to farmers and said he was ready for talks with the
PW. It was also reported that he had told the police to stop combing operations.
Regarding the
question of electricity charges it has been a World Bank stipulation throughout
the country. Anyhow in AP, though with free electricity some relief will be
gained by the farmers, it was not merely the high cost of electricity that
affected them, but also the question of regularity. A farmer requires about 8
hours of electricity daily to pump the water. The erratic supply not only
resulted in the destruction of thousands of motors but also standing crops.
Unless this too is righted the relief to the farmers will be limited. Besides,
no stand has been taken regarding following World Bank dictates or not. In fact
the CMP says not a single world on the question of reducing electricity prices.
Nor is it said as to how the mountain of debt will be tackled to release funds
for the rural sector which was thoroughly devastated under Naidu’s rule.
On the question of
the PW the key point is that of the reversal of Naidu’s policies of torture,
murder, rape and butchery. The offer of talks is fine but it must be accompanied
by a reversal of earlier policies and the PW must be recognized as a legitimate
political body not some ‘terrorist’ outfit. The PW has a comprehensive programme,
with economic, political, cultural and other policies more comprehensive that
any of the parliamentary parties. The PW and the established government must be
seen as two contending political forces. And in times of armed conflict between
the two contending forces each should treat the other according to the Geneva
Convention, and UN resolutions regarding prisoners of war, torture, etc. As per
even these conventions set by the present order, an immediate stop must be put
to fake encounters, arbitrary arrests, torture, etc.
In fact in a news
item printed in the May 21 issue of The Hindu the AP State Secretary of the PW,
Com. Ramakrishna, said that "Before launching the dialogue, the government
should stop the encounters, lift the ban, announce a ceasefire, and order a
judicial probe into all the fake encounters….. If the government meets those
demands the PW will reciprocate by observing a ceasefire." He further warned
"if the conditions were not met by the present government, it would face
renewed violence". Casting doubts on the government’s sincerity to solve the
"people’s problems", he termed the TDP and the Congress as parties of "repressive
policies and pro-imperialist", which had never attempted to solve people’s
problems. He further stated that they have "bitter experience of being
cheated by the previous government when the negotiations were on, as the police
continued to kill its members in the name of encounters".
While utilising the
conflicts within the ruling classes the people’s forces should not expect much
change in the policies of the Congress. There will be some temporary relief from
the repressive policies of the TDP, some nominal welfare measures will be handed
out to the poor, and the illusion will be maintained that through the power of
the vote change is possible. An oppertunity will be gained to reduild the
people’s movement, even if for a short period. Thereby the democratic and
revolutionary forces can be consolidated with preparations to face an even more
vicious onslaught in the future.
|